A Peptide Hairpin Inhibitor of Amyloid β-Protein Oligomerization and

Oct 30, 2009 - David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. ⊥ Neuroscience Interdepartmental Ph.D. Program. @ Molecular Biology Institute, Brain Researc...
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Biochemistry 2009, 48, 11329–11331 11329 DOI: 10.1021/bi901325g

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A Peptide Hairpin Inhibitor of Amyloid β-Protein Oligomerization and Fibrillogenesis† ‡

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Ghiam Yamin,‡,§,^,@ Piotr Ruchala, and David B. Teplow*,§,^,@ Medical Scientist Training Program, §Department of Neurology, Division of Infectious Diseases, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA; ^Neuroscience Interdepartmental Ph.D. Program, @Molecular Biology Institute, Brain Research Institute, Chemistry-Biology Interface Training Program, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095 Received July 30, 2009; Revised Manuscript Received October 24, 2009 ABSTRACT: Amyloid β-protein (Aβ) self-assembly is linked strongly to Alzheimer’s disease. We found that PP-Leu, a tridecapeptide analogue of broad-spectrum antiviral peptides termed θ-defensins, potently inhibits Aβ oligomer and fibril formation. This effect appeared to be mediated through sequestration of the amyloidogenic Aβ peptide in colloid-like assemblies. PP-Leu comprises a turn formed by a D-Pro-L-Pro amino acid dyad and stabilized by a disulfide bond, a motif that was exceptionally resistant to endoproteinase K digestion. This combination of assembly inhibitory activity and protease resistance suggests that PP-Leu may have potential therapeutic value.

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) affects an estimated 5.2 million Americans and is the fifth-leading cause of death among those over the age of 65 (1-3). AD is characterized by cerebral extracellular amyloid fibril formation by the amyloid β-protein (Aβ) and by intraneuronal paired helical filament formation by the protein tau (3). Aβ exists predominately as a 40- or 42-amino acid protein. Oligomerization and fibrillogenesis of Aβ are thought to cause AD (4, 5). Effective inhibitors of Aβ assembly thus have been sought (6-8). Several groups have investigated the use of peptide and peptidomimetic inhibitors (6-8). Soto et al. used small “β-sheet breaker” peptides that bind to Aβ and prevent its assembly into toxic structures (7). Assembly inhibitors also have been produced using short N-methyl peptides homologous to the central hydrophobic cluster region of Aβ, Leu17-Ala21, which is important in Aβ fibril formation (8). Recently, Fradinger et al. (9) reported the synthesis of peptide inhibitors designed from hydrophobic C-terminal segments of Aβ. Common features of these inhibitors are their hydrophobicity and their propensity to incorporate into β-sheets. These characteristics also are displayed by potent antiviral peptides, termed θ-defensins, and by peptidic analogues of the toxin invariant domain of cholesterol-dependent cytolysins (10, 11). To determine whether θ-defensins or cytolysins might also be active in inhibiting Aβ assembly, we used thioflavin T (ThT) fluorescence to monitor the development of β-sheet structure in mixtures of Aβ42 and each of 10 of these potential inhibitors (data not shown). Nine of the inhibitors formed extended β-sheet structures themselves, precluding their further use. However, one

compound, the θ-defensin analogue PP-Leu, was active and did not display significant ThT binding (data not shown). PP-Leu (Figure 1) is a 13-amino acid peptide hairpin stabilized by a Cys2-Cys13 disulfide bond and a type II0 β-turn formed by a D-Pro7-L-Pro8 moiety (12). Such cyclic peptides can possess exceptional structural stability and protease resistance, important properties for maximizing biological activity and half-life in vivo (13).

FIGURE 1: (a) Primary structure and (b) ball-and-stick model of PPLeu. Atoms are color-coded: C, gray; O, red; N, blue; S, yellow.

† This work was supported by the UCLA Chemistry-Biology Interface program (G.Y.), the Jim Easton Consortium for Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery and Biomarkers at UCLA (D.B.T.), funds from the Adams and Burnham endowments provided by the Dean’s Office of the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA (P.R.), and National Institutes of Health Grant AG027818 (D.B.T.). *To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dteplow@ ucla.edu. Telephone: (310) 206-2030. Fax: (310) 206-1700.

To explore the inhibitory effects of PP-Leu systematically, we determined the concentration dependence of PP-Leu inhibition of Aβ assembly. To do so, ThT fluorescence assays were performed using freshly prepared, aggregate-free Aβ42 incubated at 37 C (Figure 2). Aβ42, the longer of the two predominant Aβ isoforms in humans, is thought to be the key pathologic agent in AD (3, 4). Aβ42 incubated alone exhibited a rapid increase in ThT fluorescence that reached a plateau after ≈24 h and then declined thereafter. This behavior is characteristic of amyloid assembly reactions (14). PP-Leu diminished the rate of Aβ42 assembly, and the final level of ThT bound, in a concentrationdependent manner. At 24 h, samples of PP-Leu and Aβ42 at molar ratios of 1:5 and 1:1 yielded ThT signals that were ≈1/2 and ≈1/4 of that of Aβ42 alone, respectively. At 5:1 and 10:1 molar ratios, no significant increase in ThT binding was observed over time. No ThT signal increase was observed in these latter samples even if the incubation was extended to 300 h (data not shown). To determine whether PP-Leu blocked fibril formation, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was performed on aliquots removed during ThT assays performed with PP-Leu and Aβ42 at a 5:1 molar ratio (Aβ concentration of 55 μM). The ThT signal remained constant (